In case you don't know them West Midlands in Europe are, of course, partnered by two of the usual suspects – the West Midlands Local Government Association and, surprise surprise, Advantage West Midlands – and therefore claim to be representing local and regional government from the West Midlands in Brussels…

And if this event is the one on their calendar (no point trusting the ‘What’s New’ section, they barely put a date on anything and much of it is decidedly old), it was named the conference “For Green Transport”.

That’s right, more conferring about climate change…

Even if you were to put aside the cost of this sort of thing (which no doubt involved flying out various experts and putting them up in hotels, refreshments, taxis, the lot) it’s difficult to imagine an event or an issue further removed from the concerns of ordinary council taxpayers.

Household bills are escalating and some people are genuinely struggling to keep up with council tax rises; schools are failing to educate; libraries are closing down; bin collections are infrequent, complicated and unreliable; planning applications (even for some sheds!) face mountains of red-tape. Parochial stuff in some cases, but these are the issues that often matter the most to people.

People are less concerned about green transport, of that you can be almost certain. Even less concerned with talking shops that endlessly rake over such issues to no avail, and with no power to action half of the measures they discuss.

For all West Midlands in Europe can do about climate change, they may just as well be dancing about it as talking about it. They should leave such discussions to global leaders, and divert taxpayers’ money back to where it is needed.

In case you don't know them West Midlands in Europe are, of course, partnered by two of the usual suspects – the West Midlands Local Government Association and, surprise surprise, Advantage West Midlands – and therefore claim to be representing local and regional government from the West Midlands in Brussels…

And if this event is the one on their calendar (no point trusting the ‘What’s New’ section, they barely put a date on anything and much of it is decidedly old), it was named the conference “For Green Transport”.

That’s right, more conferring about climate change…

Even if you were to put aside the cost of this sort of thing (which no doubt involved flying out various experts and putting them up in hotels, refreshments, taxis, the lot) it’s difficult to imagine an event or an issue further removed from the concerns of ordinary council taxpayers.

Household bills are escalating and some people are genuinely struggling to keep up with council tax rises; schools are failing to educate; libraries are closing down; bin collections are infrequent, complicated and unreliable; planning applications (even for some sheds!) face mountains of red-tape. Parochial stuff in some cases, but these are the issues that often matter the most to people.

People are less concerned about green transport, of that you can be almost certain. Even less concerned with talking shops that endlessly rake over such issues to no avail, and with no power to action half of the measures they discuss.

For all West Midlands in Europe can do about climate change, they may just as well be dancing about it as talking about it. They should leave such discussions to global leaders, and divert taxpayers’ money back to where it is needed.

Welcome to the TPA

Welcome to The TaxPayers' Alliance, Britain's grassroots campaigning group dedicated to reforming taxes, cutting spending and protecting taxpayers. If you like what we do, become a supporter now by signing up to our mailing list using the form below. John O'Connell, Chief Executive